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Example (These cramped Moscow dorms provide a rare glimpse into college life in Russia):

1:

Ndlovu, who attends the university on a scholarship, pays $10 a month for his room. "It's cheap. That's for sure," he told Dumont.

2:

Nigerian students Christopher Onoja, top, 22, and Issac Ismaila, bottom, 24, both came to Russia on a scholarship. “Honestly, I don’t like anything about this place because the rooms are full of roaches and bedbugs.

3:

According to Dumont, rooms shared between three to four people are generally around $50 a month per person if the students are not on scholarship.

The same news article, but different grammar. Which one is correct though?

1 Answer 1

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Both are grammatically correct. But on a scholarship implies a specific scholarship while on scholarship describes a state. From these examples, you can see they use on a scholarship when describing specific students but they use on scholarship to describe the general state of a non-specified student.

Also, the word "scholarship" as used in on scholarship would be considered uncountable like the word "money". It is not necessarily referring to one scholarship as on a scholarship suggests.

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  • It appears that 'scholarship' when used without an article can be considered uncountable, compare with "money". Commented Aug 10, 2015 at 15:41
  • Good point @VictorBazarov, I will add to my answer
    – StephanieS
    Commented Aug 10, 2015 at 15:52
  • Scholarship is always a countable noun when it means the amount granted to a student to pay for his education.
    – Khan
    Commented Aug 10, 2015 at 20:02

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